oh where oh where might the marijuana grow

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DrFever

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You ever ask your self does marijuana grow naturally does USA have there own Weed or was it passed down from the original places were weed grows wild so really makes me think like OG kush strain and how cali thinks its there own when non of the genetics really cam from California
just some stoners screwing around with breeding lol

Cannabis originates in the himalayas, near Tibet. The chinese used it for a time, but then discovered opium & it lost favour with them. Around the same time the seeds were scattered around & it spread to India where they found various medicinal uses for it & made rope & oils with it. The arabs planted it in & around Afghanistan. Some of the fields have been cultivated for more than a 1000 years.
The first definite record of the marijuana plant in the New World dates from 1545 A.D, when the Spaniards introduced it into Chile. It has been suggested, however, that African slaves familiar with marijuana as an intoxicant and medicine brought the seeds with them to Brazil even earlier in the sixteenth century. There are certain parts of Colombia in South America, where there are records of some wild plants growing as tall as 5 storeys high.
Source:
The Book of Grass: An Anthology on Indian Hemp
 
History of cannabis
Cannabis sativa appears naturally in many tropical and humid parts of the world. Its use as a mind altering drug has been documented by archaeological finds in prehistoric societies in Euro-Asia and Africa.[39]

The oldest known written record on cannabis use comes from the Chinese Emperor Shen Nung in 2727 B.C. Classical Greeks and Romans were using cannabis, while in the Middle East, use spread throughout the Islamic empire to North Africa. In 1545 cannabis spread to the western hemisphere where Spaniards imported it to Chile for its use as fiber. In North America cannabis, in the form of hemp, was grown for use in rope, clothing and paper. [40][41][42][43]

Early classifications


Relative size of varieties of Cannabis
The Cannabis genus was first classified using the "modern" system of taxonomic nomenclature by Carolus Linnaeus in 1753, who devised the system still in use for the naming of species.[44] He considered the genus to be monotypic, having just a single species that he named Cannabis sativa L. (L. stands for Linnaeus, and indicates the authority who first named the species). Linnaeus was familiar with European hemp, which was widely cultivated at the time. In 1785, noted evolutionary biologist Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck published a description of a second species of Cannabis, which he named Cannabis indica Lam.[45] Lamarck based his description of the newly named species on plant specimens collected in India. He described C. indica as having poorer fiber quality than C. sativa, but greater utility as an inebriant. Additional Cannabis species were proposed in the 19th century, including strains from China and Vietnam (Indo-China) assigned the names Cannabis chinensis Delile, and Cannabis gigantea Delile ex Vilmorin.[46] However, many taxonomists found these putative species difficult to distinguish. In the early 20th century, the single-species concept was still widely accepted, except in the Soviet Union where Cannabis continued to be the subject of active taxonomic study. The name Cannabis indica was listed in various Pharmacopoeias, and was widely used to designate Cannabis suitable for the manufacture of medicinal preparations.[47]

20th century


Cannabis ruderalis
In 1924, Russian botanist D.E. Janichevsky concluded that ruderal Cannabis in central Russia is either a variety of C. sativa or a separate species, and proposed C. sativa L. var. ruderalis Janisch. and Cannabis ruderalis Janisch. as alternative names.[27] In 1929, renowned plant explorer Nikolai Vavilov assigned wild or feral populations of Cannabis in Afghanistan to C. indica Lam. var. kafiristanica Vav., and ruderal populations in Europe to C. sativa L. var. spontanea Vav.[32][46] In 1940, Russian botanists Serebriakova and Sizov proposed a complex classification in which they also recognized C. sativa and C. indica as separate species. Within C. sativa they recognized two subspecies: C. sativa L. subsp. culta Serebr. (consisting of cultivated plants), and C. sativa L. subsp. spontanea (Vav.) Serebr. (consisting of wild or feral plants). Serebriakova and Sizov split the two C. sativa subspecies into 13 varieties, including four distinct groups within subspecies culta. However, they did not divide C. indica into subspecies or varieties.[27][48] This excessive splitting of C. sativa proved too unwieldy, and never gained many adherents.

In the 1970s, the taxonomic classification of Cannabis took on added significance in North America. Laws prohibiting Cannabis in the United States and Canada specifically named products of C. sativa as prohibited materials. Enterprising attorneys for the defense in a few drug busts argued that the seized Cannabis material may not have been C. sativa, and was therefore not prohibited by law. Attorneys on both sides recruited botanists to provide expert testimony. Among those testifying for the prosecution was Dr. Ernest Small, while Dr. Richard E. Schultes and others testified for the defense. The botanists engaged in heated debate (outside of court), and both camps impugned the other's integrity.[36][37] The defense attorneys were not often successful in winning their case, because the intent of the law was clear.[49]

In 1976, Canadian botanist Ernest Small[50] and American taxonomist Arthur Cronquist published a taxonomic revision that recognizes a single species of Cannabis with two subspecies: C. sativa L. subsp. sativa, and C. sativa L. subsp. indica (Lam.) Small & Cronq.[46] The authors hypothesized that the two subspecies diverged primarily as a result of human selection; C. sativa subsp. sativa was presumably selected for traits that enhance fiber or seed production, whereas C. sativa subsp. indica was primarily selected for drug production. Within these two subspecies, Small and Cronquist described C. sativa L. subsp. sativa var. spontanea Vav. as a wild or escaped variety of low-intoxicant Cannabis, and C. sativa subsp. indica var. kafiristanica (Vav.) Small & Cronq. as a wild or escaped variety of the high-intoxicant type. This classification was based on several factors including interfertility, chromosome uniformity, chemotype, and numerical analysis of phenotypic characters.[30][46][51]

Professors William Emboden, Loran Anderson, and Harvard botanist Richard E. Schultes and coworkers also conducted taxonomic studies of Cannabis in the 1970s, and concluded that stable morphological differences exist that support recognition of at least three species, C. sativa, C. indica, and C. ruderalis.[52][53][54][55] For Schultes, this was a reversal of his previous interpretation that Cannabis is monotypic, with only a single species.[56] According to Schultes' and Anderson's descriptions, C. sativa is tall and laxly branched with relatively narrow leaflets, C. indica is shorter, conical in shape, and has relatively wide leaflets, and C. ruderalis is short, branchless, and grows wild in central Asia. This taxonomic interpretation was embraced by Cannabis aficionados who commonly distinguish narrow-leafed "sativa" drug strains from wide-leafed "indica" drug strains.[57]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannabis
 
interesting read, thanks.

as for
You ever ask your self does marijuana grow naturally does USA have there own Weed or was it passed down from the original places were weed grows wild so really makes me think like OG kush strain and how cali thinks its there own when non of the genetics really cam from California
just some stoners screwing around with breeding lol
by that thinking, what is an american? they didn't originate there but came over like marijuana ..just some people screwing around with breeding :p ;)

:D
 
interesting read, thanks.

as for
by that thinking, what is an american? they didn't originate there but came over like marijuana ..just some people screwing around with breeding :p ;)

:D

I would like to think I did my part. :clap: I have 3 kids and 8 grandchildren...So far......
 

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